And the Bee has a graphic look at how he spent $1.33 million he allegedly stole from CapRadio:
And the Bee has a graphic look at how he spent $1.33 million he allegedly stole from CapRadio:
Cant read the entire article or see the graphic as its behind a paywall... but i also dont support cheating somehow to see behind the paywall.
Seriously, what's it been now, two years since this scandal broke into public view? And the crimes actually began occurring much earlier than that. It sounds to me like the sheriff and the district attorney are looking for a way to run out the clock (i.e., reach the "statute of limitations" date) so they can avoid indicting Jun and holding a very public, highly embarrassing trial. Much easier to reach a civil settlement with him, with restitution, and not have all this crap muddy the professional reputations of (to use a Yiddish expression) some Big Machers in the CSUS and professional communities, and undoubtedly a few local and state government officials too.
Now that the D.A. isn't going to be on November's ballot for a congressional seat, I'll be watching with interest whether Mr. Ho continues this prosecution or loses interest in a white collar case. To repeat myself, as much damage and heartbreak as this sordid affair has done to the Cap Radio staff and reputation, it's a small potatoes case in the greater scheme of things. Their insurance company has made the organization financially whole and will civilly pursue Reina themselves. So the D.A. might decide its resources could be better applied to higher profile cases.Allow me to draw a possible scenario: "Oops, we miscalculated. We thought we had another day/week/month [dealer's choice] to file criminal charges against Mr. Reina. Upon further analysis, we see we j-u-s-t missed the Statute of Limitations deadline and can't go back and undo the oversight. However, Mr. Reina has agreed to a [sealed] civil settlement to repay the money he embezzled, plus interest, so he is not getting away without restitution, so case closed."
Your P.S. is very interesting, Mike. Back on last New Year's Eve, I wrote in a predecessor thread:
Now that the D.A. isn't going to be on November's ballot for a congressional seat, I'll be watching with interest whether Mr. Ho continues this prosecution or loses interest in a white collar case. To repeat myself, as much damage and heartbreak as this sordid affair has done to the Cap Radio staff and reputation, it's a small potatoes case in the greater scheme of things. Their insurance company has made the organization financially whole and will civilly pursue Reina themselves. So the D.A. might decide its resources could be better applied to higher profile cases.
We'll see...
Here it is. (It's from a P.M. you sent me back in Feb. Nothing in here is personal or confidential, so I'm pasting the clip into this message.)I wrote that P.S. with your earlier post in mind.
My thoughts:
I can't find it now, but I remember researching and replying to your suggestion that this was "a small potatoes case" a few months ago. And what I found was that by Sacramento standards, it's not. It's actually one of the larger ones (if I remember correctly, top five), and it's made worse by it being a betrayal of a non-profit rather than a crooked private business thing.
I went through that article and the list of his grifts, and I'm offended by how he misappropriated that money. A bit of which came from my own contributions, even though (as you know) I'm out of market.It's hard to overestimate the outrage in the community. And with pieces like the Bee's item-by-item analysis of where $1.33 million of CapRadio's money went, that anger remains red-hot.
Mr. Ho's problem is that he's the D.A. of one county, but the congressional district has been redistricted this year to extend beyond that county into parts of Yolo and Sutter. And the D.A. has to appear to be a tough guy, where voters typically want to start out with warm fuzzies about a new congressman/woman. (Growing a spine, or pretending to, happens later.) That's not typically who voters want to send to D.C. And the last couple of assistant DA's that I can recall getting sent to Washington (Kamala Harris and Eric Swalwell) didn't exactly bathe themselves in glory, did they?I don't have any specific knowledge of what D.A. Ho's next move will be, but given his poor showing in the Congressional race, running for re-election in 2028 would seem to be a solid move. His predecessor, Anne Marie Schubert, did three terms as D.A. and only left office to run in 2022 for California Attorney General. Like Ho, she lost in the primary, coming in a distant fourth.
Schubert's predecessor, Jan Scully, did a record-setting five terms.
It appears no Sacramento D.A. has ever been elected to higher office afterward. At least one has become a judge, the others tend to work for justice foundations after they leave office.
Thien Ho is 48 years old. Unless he blows a major case, re-election to a third term as D.A. would probably be a slam-dunk.
Here it is. (It's from a P.M. you sent me back in Feb. Nothing in here is personal or confidential, so I'm pasting the clip into this message.)
"Yeah, but Sacramento isn't New York. Jun's would be in the top 10 embezzlement cases in the town's history.
The DC Solar case is the topper ($1 billion), but that was a statewide thing that just happened to be headquartered in Sac. Then Deepal Wannakuwate---an investment guy who took $100 million from a bunch of investors from all over the place. Again, he just happened to be here. The DC Solar guy was sentenced to 30 years in prison, Wannaukuwate got 20 years.
After that, Jeff David, former Chief Revenue Officer for the NBA Sacramento Kings, stole $13 million from the team and its sponsors. He got 7 years in prison and served 4 before getting early release.
The closest comp to Jun---within $100,000 of what he's accused of stealing---is the former CEO of Goodwill for Northern California and Northern Nevada. That's a $1.4 million case. His attorneys are dragging it out, so it still hasn't gone to trial, but they're talking potentially 20 years for him. Goodwill's legally a nonprofit, and there's a lot of outrage. That one only came to light two years ago, and the community was still buzzing about it when the Jun thing started to break.
And, remember, the D.A. is running for Congress. It's in his interest to look tough.
I think Reina's attorney's best shot is to work out a deal. If she gets an offer for Reina of under 5 years in prison, she should take it and run."
I went through that article and the list of his grifts, and I'm offended by how he misappropriated that money. A bit of which came from my own contributions, even though (as you know) I'm out of market.

Mr. Ho's problem is that he's the D.A. of one county, but the congressional district has been redistricted this year to extend beyond that county into parts of Yolo and Sutter.
And the D.A. has to appear to be a tough guy, where voters typically want to start out with warm fuzzies about a new congressman/woman. (Growing a spine, or pretending to, happens later.) That's not typically who voters want to send to D.C.
And the last couple of assistant DA's
that I can recall getting sent to Washington (Kamala Harris and Eric Swalwell) didn't exactly bathe themselves in glory, did they?

I agree. It might be legal malpractice if she isn't trying her best to negotiate a plea.Thanks for finding and sharing that! I knew I'd written it and I knew it was to you, but I completely zoned it being a PM.
I stand by my thought on what Reina's attorney should do, but we won't know for at least three months---this has gone on this far without a plea entry.
I caught that too. It only makes sense if he was buying wheelbarrows of ground coffee beans to bring into the station to keep the hard-working staff well caffeinated. But something tells me you and your colleagues were brewing a lesser grade of rot-gut than Kona or Jamaican Blue Mountain in the station's Mr. Coffee.The thing I found most interesting was the "local haunts" heatmap, showing where Reina spent money in town. Now, food and drink are legitimate expenses in that position, so, if he were to find a shoebox of receipts that match them, that'd be one thing. But this one...
View attachment 12172
Temple Coffee Roasters is an excellent local chain of coffee places. Jun visited 14 times and spent $3,933.
To spend $3,933 in 14 visits results in an average per-visit expenditure of $280.92. That's a LOT of coffee.
My bad. I misread which counties were gerrymandered into district 6. But I knew it no longer included all of Sacto County. I could have written that more clearly.No. The redrawn CD 6 is part of Sacramento County, part of Yolo County (West Sacramento), and the urban/suburban parts of Placer County (Roseville and Rocklin).
True, but this is going to be anything but a typical off-year election. We can thank The Pride of Queens for that too.Maybe. Depends entirely on the district and the election cycle. The smart money is Democrats want folks with backbone to be elected to and gain a majority in Congress.
I didn't intend to imply Ho was an ADA. Just that, for very different reasons, both Swalwell and Harris were former ADA's who left office in less-than-glorious ways. I know Kamala went through a number of higher offices on the way to the 2024 race. I also agree it was unfair to airdrop her into a presidential race in the last few months. But ... that's what a vice president is supposed to be there for. If Biden had suddenly died in office 107 days before the election, it's very likely she would have had to run the rest of the campaign at the top of the ticket while adjusting the staff and strategy on the fly.Ho is D.A.--not ADA. Six years in the top job.
No, it's not.I wouldn't lump VP Harris and Swalwell together, given that Swalwell is accused, credibly, of sexual assault and Kamala---isn't.
Harris won every election until she had to parachute into a presidential general election in 107 days and even then, in the popular vote, she missed by 1.5 percentage points.
View attachment 12174
While Swalwell did go from Assistant D.A. to Congress, Harris was an ADA for four years before being elected as District Attorney and serving eight years, then being elected Attorney General of the State of California where she served six years before being elected to the United States Senate. After four years in the Senate, Joe Biden chose her as his running mate and when he won the 2020 election, she became Vice-President of the United States.
That's not too shabby for a kid from Oakland.
I caught that too. It only makes sense if he was buying wheelbarrows of ground coffee beans to bring into the station to keep the hard-working staff well caffeinated. But something tells me you and your colleagues were brewing a lesser grade of rot-gut than Kona or Jamaican Blue Mountain in the station's Mr. Coffee.

I also agree it was unfair to airdrop her into a presidential race in the last few months. But ... that's what a vice president is supposed to be there for.
If Biden had suddenly died in office 107 days before the election, it's very likely she would have had to run the rest of the campaign at the top of the ticket while adjusting the staff and strategy on the fly.
Whoever the G.O.P. candidate, predicted doorbell-ringing Pollster Sam Lubell, he would now give President Kennedy a far better run for his money than seemed possible only five months ago. Then, wrote Lubell, “interviewing across the nation pointed to a landslide victory for President Kennedy.” Now “the President faces a close election with only a small edge in his favor.”
Lubell’s explanation: with the easing of cold war tensions, the public now views civil rights strife rather than the struggle with the Soviets as the U.S.’s No. 1 political issue. “Interviews in five Eastern states,* where Kennedy should be at his strongest,” wrote Lubell, “show him losing a tenth of his 1960 support—mainly because ‘he gives in too much to the Negro.’ ”